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  1. Boris Mikhailovich Kozo-Polyansky (Russian: Борис Михайлович Козо-Полянский; 20 January 1890 – 21 April 1957) was a Soviet and Russian botanist and evolutionary biologist, best known for his seminal work, Symbiogenesis: A New Principle of Evolution, which was the first work to place the theory of symbiogenesis into a Darwinian evolutionary context, as well as one ...

  2. Boris Mikhaylovich Kozo-Polyansky (1890–1957) graduated from Moscow University and in 1918 joined a Soviet university in his native Voronezh where he became a vice-president as well as director of the local botanical garden.

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  4. Kozo- Polyansky’s Life Boris Mikhaylovich Kozo- Polyansky (1890– 1957) graduated from Moscow University before the Rus sian Revolution of February 1917 and the Bolshevik coup- d’état that followed it (October 1917). In his native Voronezh, in 1918, he joined a new Soviet university cobbled together from the faculty of Yuriev

  5. Jan 1, 2021 · Boris Mikhailovich Kozo-Polyansky (January 20, 1890 – April 21, 1957) was born in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, then a part of the Russian Empire, in a family of a military officer, and moved to Voronezh, Russia in his early youth. He graduated from the Moscow University in 1914 at the age of 24 and then returned to Voronezh.

    • Vladimir A. Agafonov, Vladimir V. Negrobov, Abir U. Igamberdiev
    • 2021
  6. This contribution details the complex history of the early work by Boris Kozo-Polyansky (1924) that became available in English translation 86 years after it was published in Russian. The great American naturalist Lynn Margulis—whose serial endosymbiosis theory was presciently predated by Kozo-Polyansky by four decades—was instrumental in organizing this resurrection and ‘horizontal ...

    • Victor Fet
    • 2021
  7. botanist Boris Mikhailovich Kozo -Polyansky (1890 –1957). It was published in Russian in 1924, by a publishing house Puchina (‘The Abyss’), which mostly specialized in science fiction. Lynn Margulis first learned about Kozo -Polyansky and his ideas in 1975 from the great Russian botanist Armen Takhtajan (1910 –2009) at the International

  8. Jul 20, 2010 · Working from this fundamental idea, the botanist, Boris Mikhailovich Kozo-Polyansky, went on to broad-sweeping speculations, collecting examples of symbiogenetic systems from all groups of living organisms, and reconciling his new theory of symbiogenesis with the Darwinian evolutionary ideas of the early 1920s, well before the development of ...

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